Tennessee Alternative Dispute Resolution: Mediation and Arbitration
Tennessee's legal system provides structured pathways for resolving disputes outside of formal court proceedings, collectively known as alternative dispute resolution (ADR). This page covers the definition, procedural mechanics, common use cases, and decision boundaries of the two primary ADR forms — mediation and arbitration — as governed by Tennessee statute and court rules. Understanding ADR is essential for anyone navigating Tennessee's legal system, because courts increasingly mandate or encourage these processes before trial.
Definition and scope
Alternative dispute resolution refers to any mechanism by which parties resolve a legal conflict without a full judicial trial. In Tennessee, ADR is governed primarily by the Tennessee Code Annotated (T.C.A.) Title 29, Chapter 5 (the Tennessee Uniform Arbitration Act) and T.C.A. § 36-4-131 for family law matters. The Tennessee Supreme Court also issues rules under the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure, particularly Rule 31, which authorizes court-ordered mediation.
Mediation is a facilitated negotiation in which a neutral third party — the mediator — assists disputing parties in reaching a voluntary, mutually acceptable agreement. The mediator holds no adjudicatory authority; no binding decision is imposed. Arbitration, by contrast, involves a neutral arbitrator (or panel) who hears evidence and arguments and issues a decision. That decision may be binding or non-binding depending on prior agreement.
The distinction matters structurally: mediation preserves party autonomy over outcomes, while binding arbitration functions as a private substitute for judicial adjudication. A full glossary of ADR-related terms is available in the Tennessee legal system terminology and definitions resource.
The Tennessee Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) oversees court-connected ADR programs statewide. The Tennessee Supreme Court Alternative Dispute Resolution Commission certifies mediators and establishes ethical standards under Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 31.
How it works
Mediation process
Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 31 defines the procedural framework for court-connected mediation. The process follows these phases:
- Referral or agreement — A court orders mediation, or parties voluntarily agree to it by contract clause or stipulation.
- Selection of mediator — Parties select a Rule 31–registered mediator from the AOC's publicly maintained roster, or a court appoints one.
- Pre-mediation submission — Each side submits a brief statement of the dispute, relevant documents, and relief sought.
- Joint session — The mediator opens with ground rules and facilitates a joint meeting where each party states their position.
- Caucus — The mediator meets privately with each party to explore interests, constraints, and potential settlement ranges.
- Agreement or impasse — If the parties reach agreement, the mediator drafts a memorandum of understanding. If impasse occurs, the mediator reports the result to the referring court without disclosing substantive communications.
- Court filing — A signed mediated settlement agreement is filed with the court and may be entered as a court order.
All communications during mediation are confidential under T.C.A. § 36-4-131 (family cases) and Rule 31 confidentiality provisions, subject to limited statutory exceptions.
Arbitration process
Under T.C.A. Title 29, Chapter 5, binding arbitration proceeds through:
- Arbitration agreement — A pre-dispute clause in a contract or a post-dispute submission agreement triggers the process.
- Demand and response — The initiating party files a demand; the respondent answers within the timeframe specified in the agreement or applicable arbitration rules.
- Arbitrator selection — Parties designate a sole arbitrator or a 3-member panel, often through organizations such as the American Arbitration Association (AAA) or JAMS under their respective rules.
- Preliminary hearing — Scheduling, discovery scope, and evidentiary rules are established.
- Hearing on the merits — Each party presents evidence and witnesses; the arbitrator applies applicable substantive law.
- Award — The arbitrator issues a written award. Under T.C.A. § 29-5-313, courts confirm binding arbitration awards absent statutory grounds for vacation or modification.
Courts retain authority to vacate an award under T.C.A. § 29-5-313 on grounds including fraud, evident partiality, or arbitrator misconduct.
Common scenarios
ADR is applied across a broad range of Tennessee legal contexts. The regulatory context for Tennessee's legal system explains the broader framework within which these mechanisms operate.
- Family law — Tennessee courts routinely order mediation in divorce and custody proceedings under T.C.A. § 36-4-131. Parenting plan disputes in many judicial districts require a mediation attempt before contested hearings.
- Employment disputes — Arbitration clauses in employment agreements frequently govern wrongful termination, discrimination, and wage claims. The Federal Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.) applies to employment contracts affecting interstate commerce, sometimes preempting state rules.
- Commercial contract disputes — Business-to-business contracts across sectors including construction, real estate, and technology services commonly include arbitration clauses invoking AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules.
- Personal injury and tort claims — Mediation is widely used pre-trial and during litigation in tort matters; arbitration is less common but does appear in medical malpractice pre-suit procedures.
- Small claims and general sessions — Parties in Tennessee General Sessions Court proceedings may pursue mediation through county-based community mediation centers affiliated with the AOC.
Decision boundaries
Scope of this page
This page covers ADR mechanisms as applied under Tennessee state law and Tennessee Supreme Court rules. It does not address:
- Federal arbitration law in isolation — the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) governs agreements in interstate commerce and may displace state law; that interaction is covered under Tennessee's legal system interaction with federal law.
- Labor arbitration under collective bargaining agreements, which is governed by the National Labor Relations Act and federal labor law, outside Tennessee state court jurisdiction.
- International commercial arbitration, which falls under the New York Convention and federal implementing statutes.
- Administrative hearings before state agencies, which are distinct proceedings under the Tennessee Uniform Administrative Procedures Act (Tennessee administrative law and agency proceedings).
Binding vs. non-binding: key classification
| Feature | Mediation | Binding Arbitration | Non-Binding Arbitration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neutral's authority | Facilitates only | Issues enforceable award | Issues advisory award |
| Party control of outcome | High | Low | Moderate |
| Appealability | Agreement enforceable as contract | Limited — T.C.A. § 29-5-313 grounds only | Award advisory; trial de novo available |
| Confidentiality | Statutory (Rule 31) | Governed by agreement/rules | Governed by agreement/rules |
| Typical Tennessee usage | Family, civil, commercial | Employment, commercial contracts | Pre-trial civil case evaluation |
Enforceability limits
Courts sitting at Tennessee's various court levels will not enforce a mediated settlement or arbitration award that:
- Was procured by fraud, duress, or misrepresentation.
- Involves a subject matter not arbitrable as a matter of public policy (e.g., certain statutory rights where waiver is prohibited).
- Lacks a valid written arbitration agreement, as required by T.C.A. § 29-5-302.
Parties seeking to understand how ADR fits within the broader structure of civil litigation should consult the Tennessee civil procedure rules overview for procedural context.
References
- Tennessee Code Annotated Title 29, Chapter 5 — Uniform Arbitration Act
- Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 31 — Alternative Dispute Resolution
- Tennessee Administrative Office of the Courts — ADR Programs
- Tennessee Code Annotated § 36-4-131 — Mediation in Family Law
- Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.
- American Arbitration Association — Commercial Arbitration Rules
- Tennessee Supreme Court ADR Commission